Daily Archives: March 31, 2011

Mercury from Orbit


SPACE WATCH
NASA – (1) An artist’s concept shows the MESSENGER spacecraft in orbit around Mercury.

(2) The wide-angle camera (WAC) is not a typical color camera. It can image in 11 colors, ranging from 430 to 1020 nm wavelength (visible through near-infrared). It does this with a filter wheel: the 11 narrow-band filters (plus one clear filter) are mounted onto a wheel that can be rotated to allow the camera to capture an image through each filter. In this image the 1000 nm, 750 nm, and 430 nm filters are displayed in red, green, and blue, respectively. Several craters appear to have excavated compositionally distinct low-reflectance (brown-blue in this color scheme) material, and the bright rays of Hokusai crater to the north cross the image.

WAC images will be used in coordination with the Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition Spectrometer (MASCS), a hyperspectral instrument that provides reflectance information at many more wavelengths, but only for one spot on the surface at a time.

(3) This WAC image showing a never-before-imaged area of Mercury’s surface was taken from an altitude of 450 km (280 miles) above the planet during the spacecraft’s first orbit with the camera in operation. The area is covered in secondary craters made by an impact outside of the field of view. Some of the secondary craters are oriented in chain-like formations.

This image was taken during MESSENGER’s closest approach to the sunlit portion of the surface during this orbit, just before crossing over the terminator. The oblique illumination by the Sun causes the long shadows and accentuates topography. The highly elliptical orbit of MESSENGER brings the spacecraft down to a periapsis (MESSENGER’s closest approach to Mercury) altitude of 200 km (125 miles) and out to an apoapsis (MESSENGER’s farthest distance from Mercury) altitude of 15,000 km (9300 miles).

(4) Bright rays, consisting of impact ejecta and secondary craters, spread across this NAC image and radiate from Debussy crater, located at the top. The image, acquired yesterday (3/29/11) during the first orbit for which MDIS was imaging, shows just a small portion of Debussy’s large system of rays in greater detail than ever previously seen. Images acquired during MESSENGER’s second Mercury flyby showed that Debussy’s rays extend for hundreds of kilometers across Mercury’s surface. Debussy crater was named in March 2010, in honor of the French composer Claude Debussy (1862-1918).

(5) At 5:20 am EDT on Mar. 29, 2011, MESSENGER captured this historic image of Mercury. This image is the first ever obtained from a spacecraft in orbit about the Solar System’s innermost planet. Over the subsequent six hours, MESSENGER acquired an additional 363 images before downlinking some of the data to Earth. The MESSENGER team is currently looking over the newly returned data, which are still continuing to come down.

Date acquired: March 29, 2011
Image Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington

Top 6 hurdles to securing a smart grid


By William Jackson – The Government Accountability Office (pdf) hosted a panel of government, industry and academic experts on smart-grid security. The panel identified six critical challenges that need to be met to ensure the cybersecurity of systems and networks that support the nation’s electricity grid:

  1. Jurisdictional cracks
  2. Lack of consumer education
  3. Least common denominator for compliance
  4. Insecure components
  5. Industry opaqueness
  6. No measure, no progress

more> http://tinyurl.com/4pum9hh

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IBM says it sees 13 billion cybersecurity alerts every day


Tom CrossBy Dean Takahashi – IBM says it that it monitors 13 billion real-time security events every day for more than 4,000 clients. That’s about 150,000 events per second, which include anything from phishing attacks to false alarms.

“The numerous, high-profile targeted attacks in 2010 shed light on a crop of highly sophisticated cyber criminals who may be well-funded and operating with knowledge of security vulnerabilities that no one else has,” said Tom Cross, threat intelligence manager at IBM X-Force. more> http://tinyurl.com/6yzpkuo

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Fed, forced by court, releases lending details


Federal ReserveBy Mark Felsenthal and Rachelle Younglai – The Federal Reserve on Thursday released the names of banks that borrowed from its main emergency lending facility during the financial crisis after having run out of legal appeals to block publication.

They detail not only the bank names but how much they borrowed from the Fed’s so-called discount window for period of August 8, 2007, to March 1, 2010. The combined usage of those emergency lending facilities peaked at $600 billion on November 5, 2008. more> http://tinyurl.com/4sjmxwj

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Three cheers for Congressman Sensenbrenner! Keep up the fight!


By Gene Quinn – According to Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) the inclusion of prior user rights might just be the poison pill that kills patent reform.

Personally speaking, I am sick and tired of legislative carve outs. If prior user rights are such a great idea then have them apply across the board. Of course, prior user rights are decidedly not a good idea and the bill could never pass if there were not an exception for Universities. That should tell you something right there!

Under a strict prior user rights regime, like the House wants, those who innovated and then concealed that innovation from the public would be able to use their secret, concealed innovation as a defense to a patent infringement action. So, in other words, prior user rights rewards those who hide innovation from the public and penalizes those who disclose their innovations to the public. The entire purpose of a patent system is to disseminate information to allow others to build upon what has come before. That is how a patent system fosters innovation. A patent system that rewards trade secret rights over patent rights is an abomination. Not only does such a system fail to advance the Constitutional purpose of patents, but it retards the primary intent of a patent system.

Three cheers for Congressman Sensenbrenner! Keep up the fight!

more> http://tinyurl.com/66m2v5k

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